The $100,000 Super High Roller at the 2012 World Poker Tour World Championship was completed on Friday night as Tom Marchese parlayed his second bullet in the event into a payday of more than $1.3 million. He defeated a stout final table and bested one of the most elite tournament fields of the year to claim the title. Finishing runner-up was Andrew Robl and he earned himself $822,375 for his finish. Here’s how it all went down.
Entering the day, Daniel Perper held the chip lead and was followed by Robl in second place. Plenty of eyes were fixed on Justin Bonomo, who entered the final table fourth in chips and was eyeing his second six-figure buy-in title of 2012. Joining those three were Tom Marchese, John Juanda and Bill Klein.
With five spots paying out a minimum of $263,160, a massive bubbled was upon everyone that returned for the third and final day. Klein was the player with the most risk having the least chips entering the final table, but he was able to double up through Perper on the very first hand of play.
According to the WPT Live Updates Team, the cards were in the air during the first level of the day — Level 18 with the blinds at 25,000/50,000/5,000. Marchese had min-raised to 100,000 from under the gun and Perper reraised from middle position to 240,000. Klein shoved all in for 615,000 from the small blind and play folded back to Perper. He called with the
From there, things were rather slow as the players eased into action, but it didn’t stay that way for long. On the 13th hand of the final table, Bonomo raised to 100,000 from the cutoff seat and Juanda reraised from the big blind to 300,000. Bonomo flatted and the flop came down
Twenty hands later, Klein’s luck ran out when he was eliminated in fifth place. He was all in preflop with the
Then just three hands later, Perper busted at the hands of Juanda. It wasn’t pretty, either, as Juanda cracked Perper’s
Over the course of the next 40 hands or so, Marchese won three massive pots against Juanda, but Juanda kept fighting. Then on the 78th hand of the final table, Marchese won a two-million chip pot from Robl. Finally on the 84th hand of the day, someone was able to nip Marchese when Juanda doubled through him. After that, the official chips counts had Marchese with 5.83 million, Juanda with 5.17 million and Robl with 2.61 million as the players moved into Level 21 with the blinds at 50,000/100,000/10,000.
The three-handed battle continued all the way until the 177th hand of the final table came up. On that hand, Robl raised from the small blind to 250,000 and Juanda three-bet to 750,000 from the big blind. Robl fired back with an all-in move and Juanda made the call. Robl tabled the
The heads-up match between the final two competitors began with Marchese holding 7.025 million in chips to Robl’s 6.585 million. Things started close and it was a long heads-up duel that lasted nearly 80 hands before the final blow was delivered to send Robl home in second place.
On the final hand of the tournament, the blinds were up to 125,000/250,000/25,000 in Level 25 and Robl raised on the button to 500,000. Marchese popped it up to 1.2 million and Robl shoved. Marchese called with the
WPT World Championship Super High Roller Final Table Payouts
Seat | Player | Chips |
---|---|---|
1 | Tom Marchese | $1,308,405 |
2 | Andrew Robl | $822,375 |
3 | John Juanda | $526,320 |
4 | Daniel Perper | 394,740 |
5 | Bill Klein | $263,160 |
This title marked the second major tournament victory for Marchese and proved to be the largest single score of his young poker career. Marchese walked away with the $1.3 million first-place prize, the $25,500 seat into next year’s WPT World Championship and the trophy. Congratulations to him on the victory and he’ll surely be riding a surge of momentum heading into the World Series of Poker that kicks off in just a few days.
Although this event has wrapped up at the 2012 WPT World Championship, things aren’t over just yet. The $25,000 World Championship event still has a final table to play and play will begin at 1600 PDT (0000 BST) on Saturday with the final six players vying for the $1.2 million first-place prize. Marvin Rettenmaier leads the way into the final table and you can see how they got there by reading the Day 6 recap. PokerNews will have a complete recap of the final table following the action on Saturday.
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